Digidog wrote: Fri May 15, 2026 2:15 am
Intelligence is the mutual interaction between a sensory-motoric input, calculative ability and physical conditions that permit or force physical adaption and development, both of the calculating functions and/or the physical traits.
The robo dogs go into a building and then behave based on unknown conditions that are present in the building using their cameras. So they fit this description. "Development" could be considered as a condition of this definition that is met because they adapt their behavior to meet the unknown conditions inside as those conditions become known.
Also, my favorite quote from Dune kind of fits this:
"Think you of the fact that a deaf person cannot hear. Then, what deafness may we not all possess? What senses do we lack that we cannot see and hear another world all around us?".
AI just has different sensory inputs from animals.
Those robo-dogs can’t procreate, nor feed themselves (they can go to a charging station, but that’s not equivalent to feeding), nor develop anything they were not equipped with from the start (their calculations can be better, but their calculating functions do not develop), nor can their sensory systems develop their calculating and decduction skills nor evolve from what they had from set-up. So they are calculating, but not intelligent.
This feels like the definition of life, not intelligence. Slime mold can do some of this, and solve mazes, but we don't think of it as intelligent.
From what I've been reading, AI is already writing over 90% of the code to improve successive versions of itself, and we are very close to recursive self-improvement.
However much a company will develop and cram in cumulatively stacking algorithms and sensational back-data adaptations in a machine, a machine will never have the sensory-mototric input and adaptability of a living organism,
Recent videos I've seen produced by Anton Petrov (a popular science commentator) suggest that the definition of what constitutes life and an organism is being blurred. They recently discovered a bacteria that devolved into a virus. Is it no longer, then, an organism? I think we need to realize that an AGI will be essentially an alien intelligence. So trying to define it within the constraints of "life" will probably set us up for some nasty surprises.
nor will it be subject to those processes that necessitate or force it to adapt, adjust and develop independently.
https://thenextweb.com/news/anthropics- ... release-it
Won't it?
There is a logical-mathematical law that says that it is impossible to include an outer axiom into a deduction that is depending on that very axiom. In other words: If you deduct that there is no difference between a rock and your mom because they both cannot fly on their own accord, you cannot include what makes flying possible since you thereby expand the terms for your comparison and thus your conclusion to factors that make your reasoning void. Regarding our Universe, and the conditions for life and matter: You cannot lift yourself by yourself, because if you could, you would include forces (factors) that would render your position in the Universe void.
I sort of get where you are coming from here, but AI doesn't exist in a vacuum, either. Humanity has certainly moved itself. An AGI with access to compute and data (cameras, feedback from humans, feedback from drones it controls, etc) could do the same. You can't pull yourself up without anything, but you can pull yourself up on a pull-up bar. AI can do the same with compute and access to experimental or experiential data.
You can't try to dictate what alien life might be like using the rules that govern life on earth. When an alien shows up with two legs, two arms, and two eyes in a movie, with a ray gun ... that's so unrealistic and unlikely. Alien life and intelligence will likely be unrecognizable as such to humans.
An AGI will be the same -- completely alien. You can't use the definition of life to define artificial intelligence.